Confusion over Iraq soccer explosion - US carried out blast - 18 children dead

Last Updated: Tuesday, 27 February 2007, 22:12 GMT

Confusion over Iraq soccer blast

There are confusing reports about at least one explosion in the western Iraqi city of Ramadi.

Iraqi officials said 18 people, most of them children, had been killed in a blast near a football pitch.

Later a US spokesman told Reuters news agency that US forces had carried out a controlled explosion in Ramadi, also close to a football field.

The official said there were injuries, but no deaths. It was not clear if both reports referred to the same incident.

However, the chief American military spokesman in Iraq, Lt Colonel Christopher Garver, later said he thought there had been "two separate incidents" in Ramadi.

Iraqi Prime minister Nouri Maliki appeared to confirm the killings, calling them a "cowardly act" by "terrorist bands".

Iraqi police said most of the victims were aged 10 to 15 and had gathered to play football when a bomb went off.

Football attacks

Ramadi is the capital of Anbar province - the centre of Iraq's Sunni Arab insurgency.

On Saturday, a bomb near a Sunni mosque close to the city killed more than 50 people after the mosque's imam had made a speech criticising al-Qaeda, which correspondents say is entrenched in the area.

Violence continues to kills dozens of Iraqis every day

The BBC's Jane Peel in Baghdad says it would not be the first time children playing football have been caught up in the violence.

Last August at least 12 boys and young men died when a bomb exploded on a football pitch in the capital.

There has been a sharp rise in violence between Iraq's Sunni and Shia Muslim groups in the past year.

Iraqi and US forces have launched an operation aimed at stemming sectarian attacks in the Baghdad area.

The Ramadi attack was reported as other bombings killed at least 18 people across Iraq.

Also on Tuesday, four bombings in the Iraqi capital killed 12 people, including three US soldiers.

Two of the bombings took place in the Karrada commercial area.

Meanwhile, in the northern city of Mosul, a suicide bomber drove a lorry into a police station, killing six people and wounding 38 others.

Related

Kill 'em while they're young

See unbelievable update in comments below.

More will be posted as they come in. Stay tuned.

Posted in

Comment viewing options

Select your preferred way to display the comments and click "Save settings" to activate your changes.

Related
U.S. disputes Iraq report of deadly blast in Ramadi
Conflicting reports over blast in Iraqi city:
Amid conflicting reports over what happened in the volatile western city, the U.S. military said its soldiers had carried out a controlled explosion in Ramadi, also near a soccer field, that slightly wounded 30 people, including nine children.

mparent7777 | Wed, 2007-02-28 04:05

Ramadi bomb kills playing children

AlJazeera.Net
UPDATED ON:
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 2007
20:37 MECCA TIME, 17:37 GMT

A car bomb attack near a football field in the Iraqi city of Ramadi has killed 18 youngsters according to state television and defence officials.

Iraqi television station Iraqiya said on Tuesday that the blast had been caused by a car bomb.

Police said it was a roadside bomb and that the field was near a US military base.

Sheikh Hamid al-Hais, deputy head of a council of Sunni tribal chiefs opposed to al-Qaeda, said: "The bombers have no humanity. Eighteen boys were killed, the oldest one was 15. Dozens more were wounded."

The offices of Nuri al-Maliki, Iraq's prime minister, and Jalal Talabani, the president, both issued statements condemning the blast that they said killed 18 people.

Al-Maliki's office said the dead included 12 children, while Talabani's office said all 18 were children.

Controlled blast

Sheikh Hamid said the truck, loaded up with logs, was parked next to the pitch and detonated as the boys played.

A defence official confirmed that 18 children were killed and 20 wounded in the latest attack

However, the US military told reporters that it was unaware of the bomb attack and had earlier undertaken a controlled blast in the city.

Major Jeff Pool, a US military spokesman, said the blast by US soldiers near a football field in Ramadi had slightly wounded 30 people, including nine children.

Pool said it was carried out in the courtyard of a building where bags of explosives had been found and that the wounded had cuts and bruises.

Windows from a nearby building were blown out, causing the wounds. Pool said US forces helped evacuate those injured.

He said: "I can't imagine there would be another attack involving children without our people knowing."

The major said the controlled blast in Ramadi was "stronger than we had expected".

The US military often carries out controlled explosions in Iraq to destroy captured weapons or unexploded bombs.

Referring to the football attack, a police colonel in Ramadi, who declined to be identified, said a suicide bomber had detonated a truck bomb and put the time of the explosion at about 5pm.

Pool said the controlled US blast was at 5:34pm.

What is the likelihood that there were two different blasts that occurred in the same area at around the same time?

Very little.

But, more importantly - if it is the same blast - what is the likelihood that US explosives 'experts' did not know that there were children playing near the truck?

None.

Case closed. The US is screwed.

Things are going to get MUCH, MUCH worse from here on.

---------------------------------------
"Money" has no value - people do.

qrswave | Wed, 2007-02-28 10:28

Report of Deadly Iraq Bombing Questioned

Wednesday February 28, 2007 3:46 AM

BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) - State television reported Tuesday that 18 boys were killed when a car bomb exploded in a park in Ramadi, and Iraqi and international officials were quick to deplore the slaughter. But questions about key details of the report emerged just as quickly.

Iraqi police and state TV said the attack occurred Tuesday. Later, police said it happened Monday.

The confusion grew deeper following an announcement by U.S. forces that 30 civilians and one Iraqi soldier were injured by flying debris Tuesday when troops intentionally detonated 15 bags of explosives found in Ramadi. Some of the wounded were treated at a U.S. aid station, and others were flown to a military hospital for treatment, the statement said. None of the injuries was life-threatening, it added.

The news first broke after nightfall when it is too dangerous for local journalists to check the reports independently in Ramadi, a Sunni insurgent stronghold 70 miles west of Baghdad. Western reporters normally tour the area only as part of military patrols. Much of Ramadi is under effective insurgent control, and even the police have difficulty establishing the facts in bombings and assassinations.

Meanwhile, reports that the boys were killed touched off a flurry of condemnation.

UNICEF, the U.N.'s children's agency, issued a statement saying ``the loss of so many innocent children at play is unacceptable.''

``Iraq's recreational areas, as well as its schools, must be respected and protected as safe havens where children can play and learn without fear,'' said Roger Wright, the UNICEF representative for Iraq.

Iraqi President Jalal Talabani's office issued a statement denouncing the 18 deaths and calling on Iraqi security forces to ``chase and punish the criminals.''

Another statement from Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki's office called the boys' deaths ``a brutal act'' that ``reveals the ugly face'' of terrorists. The prime minister's statement described the attack as coming Tuesday.

But an official in al-Maliki's office said they based the date on the Iraqi TV report. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to make public comments.

A prominent Sunni cleric called the attack evidence of terrorists' ``deficit and weakness.''

``They (terrorists) have neither religion nor dignity,'' Sheik Hameed al-Hayes told state television.

---------------------------------------
"Money" has no value - people do.

qrswave | Wed, 2007-02-28 10:32

There is a training exercise or drill that takes places "concurrently."

Look at 9/11 or 7/7 for 2 huge examples.

I guess they do this, so if they get caught they can say they were only running a drill and it must have been someone else. "AND IT'S JUST A PURE COINCIDENCE AND IF YOU SAY DIFFERENTLY YOU ARE A CONSPIRACY THEORISTS AND WE WILL CRUCIFY YOU IN THE MEDIA OVER AND OVER AGAIN UNTIL THE MASSES BELIEVE YOU ARE CRAZY!!"

The sad thing is that tactic works. :(

Embracing substance in a soundbite era www.panaceamedia.org

panaceamedia | Thu, 2007-03-01 02:21

Wednesday, February 28, 2007


In Iraq, the killing of 18 teenagers is a horrible routine

Robert Fisk

Published: 28 February 2007

This is a story with a caution. Eighteen teenagers were killed on Monday at a football field east of Baghdad. On Sunday, equally young students of Mustansiriya University - the oldest in Baghdad - were blown up by a suicide bomber. It has become a routine, at one and the same time more horrible and more normal each day. Only two years ago, a suicide bomber drove into an American convoy in Baghdad, killing 27 civilians, half of them children taking sweets from American soldiers. What price innocence?

Well, as usual, nothing is as it seems in Iraq. Within hours of the mass deaths in Ramadi yesterday came a disturbing statement by the US military....

mparent7777 | Thu, 2007-03-01 02:28

Right on 'the money.'

This whole thing stinks to high heaven.

Zionists pulled this off, with or without the help of US troops.

My guess is that US troops are just trying to cover up their own incompetence for not knowing what the hell is going on.

I am certain that an investigation is pending on all sides of the equation.

More information will come out soon.

---------------------------------------
"Money" has no value - people do.

qrswave | Thu, 2007-03-01 02:30

unclesam wakeup

Go, Rep. Kaptur!

Tell Wall Street to Go To Hell!!!

US Gross National Debt

Just Foreign Policy Iraqi Death Estimator